Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at fertile.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Fertile.
Examples
-
Haider also visited the nearby marshes, whose annual floods had created a resource-rich ecosystem and a 6,000-year-old civilization in the area known as the Fertile Crescent — presumed home of the Garden of Eden.
Archive 2010-03-01 Olga Bonfiglio 2010
-
Haider also visited the nearby marshes, whose annual floods had created a resource-rich ecosystem and a 6,000-year-old civilization in the area known as the Fertile Crescent — presumed home of the Garden of Eden.
Seventh Anniversary of the Iraq War: Help Comes to the Garden of Eden Olga Bonfiglio 2010
-
First children's hospital to be named a Fertile Hope Center of Excellence
-
Haider also visited the nearby marshes, whose annual floods had created a resource-rich ecosystem and a 6,000-year-old civilization in the area known as the Fertile Crescent—presumed home of the Garden of Eden.
Seventh Anniversary of the Iraq War: Help Comes to the Garden of Eden Olga Bonfiglio 2010
-
Haider also visited the nearby marshes, whose annual floods had created a resource-rich ecosystem and a 6,000-year-old civilization in the area known as the Fertile Crescent—presumed home of the Garden of Eden.
Archive 2010-03-01 Olga Bonfiglio 2010
-
For starters, there's what could be called the Fertile Soil Syndrome.
-
Yes, otherwise known as the Fertile Crescent of the Midwest Industrial Belt.
-
Julia Indichova has a new book out called The Fertile Female.
Health Supplements Under Fire, II GreenFertility 2007
-
At Jarmo in Iraq, the American Robert Braidwood had found evidence for the earliest known domestication of wheat and barley, thus pinpointing the dawn of the agricultural revolution in the so-called Fertile Crescent of the Near East.
The Goddess and the Bull MICHAEL BALTER 2005
-
Those upheavals, in a region once known as the Fertile Crescent but now dependent on imported grain, were set off in part by concerns about the rising cost of essential foodstuffs, demonstrating to global leaders the extreme effects that food price spikes can have on social, economic and political stability.
NYT > Global Home By MATTHEW SALTMARSH 2011
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.